Homily for March 16th, 2020: 2 Kings 5:1-15.
Read the Bible
through, and you will find every type of person you will ever encounter or even
read about. The Syrian General Naaman, whose story we heard in our first
reading, and whom Jesus recalls in the gospel, is the original V.I.P. – a Very
Important Person. We see this in the retinue he takes with him on his visit to
what he considers the unimportant little country of Israel . He brings with him a
treasure in silver and gold, ten sets of elaborate court dress, the horses and
chariots necessary to transport all this booty, and the personnel necessary to
keep everything in order and to ensure that Naaman himself has a safe journey,
with all the comforts he requires.
The reason for
his trip is the report which has reached him from one of his wife’s servant
girls that there is a prophet in Israel who can cure people of
Naaman’s disease: leprosy. Naaman deals initially with Israel ’s king.
You wouldn’t expect a man of his importance to go traipsing through a piddling little
country like Israel looking for a mere prophet, would you? When the king sends
him on to Elisha, and Naaman finds out, upon arrival at the prophet’s modest
abode, that Elisha won’t even come out to greet him, but sends him a note
instead, he is indignant. When he reads the note, his indignation turns to
outrage. It tells him that if is looking for a cure he should wash seven times
in the nearby river Jordan .
‘You call that a river?’ Naaman protests angrily. ‘Back where I come from,
that’s nothing but a muddy creek. I’m going home.’
At this point
the real hero of the story appears: someone in Naaman’s entourage who finds
courage to say to the Great Man: ‘What have you got to lose? Why not try what
the prophet says?’ Naaman does so – and he is healed! He returns to Elisha, who
comes out now, and hears Naaman confess: “Now I know that there is no God in
all the earth, except in Israel .”
Naaman’s cure is not only physical. It is mental and spiritual as well. His
mind, and with it his soul, have been changed. He realizes that it’s not all
about himself, his ideas, his expectations.
What about us?
Are we open to the other – open to God? Are we willing to acknowledge that our
own ideas, our goals, our dreams, may fall short of what the Lord God, who loves
us more than we can ever imagine, wants for us – and yes, has in store for us
-- if only we can stop thinking it’s all about me, me, me, and tell God: “Not
what I want Lord, but what you want?”
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